Iliad by Homer

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Synopsis

Before Greece had tragedy, comedy, history, or even formal schools, there was Homer. Greeks, young and old, learned about the realities of life by hearing separate episodes from Homer sung at public festivals, and then remembering the stories through the power of song. What they remembered was what mattered most.

These epics offered bluntly honest views of life. Think of that as you are listening to Stanley Lombardo. When he performs Homer, we feel what Bob Dylan calls the 'inner substance' of great folk songs, their 'pulse and vibration and rumbling force'. We grasp the power words had before books, movies and iPods™. Homer taught the ancient Greeks about life, death, love and war. Now in Lombardo's words and voice, Homer teaches us, too.

"This gave me the opportunity to participate in a project featuring two great and important works, Homer's Iliad and Odyssey, and to further support the revival of Greek History and the Classics."

-Susan Sarandon, Narrator of Synopses and Introductions

Annotation

Retells the events of the war between Greece and the city of Troy, focusing on Achilles' quarrel with Agamemnon.

Science Daily

If you are interested in a modern recording of an ancient classic, then I would recommend this without reservation. After listening to Lombardo, he has won me over and I'm a big fan.

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars

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Biography

Ancient Greek poet Homer established the gold standard for heroic quests and sweeping journeys with his pair of classic epic poems, The Iliad and The Odyssey.

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Customer Reviews

This format is easier to read...by Anonymous

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May 13, 2008: The paragraph format makes the story much more readable. The verse format would do things arbitrarily cut a sentence in the middle for no apparent reason 'in English anyways' and start a new line with the remainder of the sentence. It makes no sense to preserve the verse form when the verse qualities are lost in translation.

illiadby Anonymous

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March 30, 2004: Out side the gates of troy many tragic events occurred between the Greeks and the Trojans. It started with this young handsome prince, his name was Paris. He got everything his heart desired. He wanted this he got it, he wanted that he got it. He wanted Helen (the most beautiful girl anyone could imagine) he go it. But Menelaus did not accept that. He called for war which had lasted ten years. At some points in this story I enjoyed read it. It was a thrilling contrast, you didn?t know what was going to happen next. Though it seemed as if there wasn`t much effort put into the ending. I thought it was very blunt, just wanting the book to end. I would not recommend this book, because there are only a few exciting scenes. The rest is talking about who is who. Most of the other books which I have read were interesting. If the book wasn?t exciting or interesting, then it was educational. I learned that the world could never change it?s history, but the world can forgive. That?s the reason why people could never exceed. They are too busy with their own pride and selfish ways. They never learn.


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